What Can Protestants Learn From Thomas Aquinas?
What Can Protestants Learn From Thomas Aquinas?
From the 16th century reformers to the 17th century Reformed Scholastics, our Protestant forefathers critically appropriated Thomas Aquinas. Although they disagreed with Thomas on doctrines like justification and ecclesiology, they considered Thomas a beam of orthodoxy and for that reason they retrieved the best Thomas had to offer. Since they thought Thomas was one of the most brilliant theologians the church has produced, they did not hesitate to benefit from him in innumerable ways—from his epistemology to metaphysic, from his Christology to ethics. Sadly, many Protestants today have never read Thomas but have absorbed caricatures of Thomas based more on fear than truth, heat than light. As a result of cutting ourselves off from Thomas evangelicals suffer from a theology that looks far more modern than orthodox. In the spirit of our Protestant forefathers, theologians unite in this issue of Credo, pushing aside chronological snobbery to ask, How can we benefit from Thomas?
Included in this issue are contributions from: Matthew Barrett, Craig Carter, David Sytsma, Richard Muller, J. V. Fesko, David Haines, Samuel Parkison, Matthew LaPine, KJ Drake, Peter Sammons, and more!
Read this issue today: What Can Protestants Learn From Thomas Aquinas?